Tropical nations make progress in slowing deforestation

10 June 2014, Mongabay news - Efforts to slow destruction of tropical forests seem to be paying off in a  number of countries, argues a new report published by the Union of Concerned  Scientists (UCS).

The report, Deforestation  Success Stories: Tropical Nations Where Forest Protection and Reforestation  Policies Have Worked, focuses on 17 countries where UCS says there are signs  of progress in addressing deforestation. The countries range from rainforest  behemoth Brazil, which has seen its rate of annual forest loss in the Amazon  decline more than 70 percent over the past decade, to Vietnam and El Salvador,  countries that were stripped of their natural forests but are now expanding  their forest cover via reforestation.

At the global level, UCS says  annual tropical forest loss declined nearly 20 percent between the 1990's and  the 2000's. The reduction has cut deforestation's share of greenhouse gas  emissions from human activities from roughly 17 percent to ten percent.

The reasons for declining deforestation are variable across the sampled  countries. In some nations deliberate policies contributed to a fall in  deforestation (Brazil, Mexico, Costa Rica), while in other cases less indirect  factors like outsourcing of timber production (Vietnam), economic transitions  (Costa Rica, Central Africa) and remittances (El Salvador) impacted changes in  forest cover.

"What's surprising about today's report is the number of  countries that are effectively protecting their tropical forests and the wide  variety of policies and programs that are working," said report author Doug  Boucher, director of UCS's Tropical Forest and Climate Initiative. "There's no  one right way to stop deforestation, but rather a smorgasbord of options."

While the report  reviews some well-known cases, like including Brazil, Costa Rica, and Mexico, it  also examines some counterintuitive examples like Guyana, which has seen a rise  in deforestation since 2007. UCS says Guyana represents a positive story because  while deforestation is rising, it is much lower than would be expected from a  poor forested country experiencing rapid economic growth.

"For countries  with high rates of deforestation, success means reducing those rates," Boucher  told mongabay.com. "For countries with low deforestation rates success simply  means keeping their rates low. That's the category that Guyana (as well as the  central African countries) fits into."

Overall the report takes an upbeat  view on trends in tropical deforestation, including improving governance,  performance-based programs like REDD+ that reward countries for protecting  forests, growing private sector engagement via zero deforestation commitments  and certification standards, initiatives that combine environmental goals with  social and economic development, and better forest monitoring.

"Effective  programs and policies—driven by individuals, communities, national governments  and the private sector—have contributed to positive impacts for forest  conservation, socioeconomic development and forest/land-use changes," said UCS.  "Lessons drawn from these success stories could be replicated elsewhere to help  reduce deforestation and increase reforestation."

The report concludes however that while there is progress in reducing  deforestation, much work still has to be done to address the issue. Some  countries, like Indonesia, continue to experience high rates of forest loss,  while within some of the "success" countries, problems like leakage — where  forest clearing is displaced to neighboring countries — and forest degradation  from logging remain.

"Nearly all the successes are partial ones, with the  drop in deforestation or extent of reforestation limited by factors such as  'leakage' (transfer of emissions elsewhere) due to globalized commodity  production," the report states. "But despite the varying outcomes, the overall  result is that deforestation has been reduced and reforestation increased."

Source: http://news.mongabay.com/2014/0610-deforestation-success-stories.html#zJ1Q5yO5b5XEKhiS.99